A few digital illustrations I recently created which were inspired by my love of fantasy, sword & socrery fiction such as the works of Robert E Howard’s Conan the Barbarian, King Kull & Solomon Kane. And comic book artist Barry Windsor-Smith. No other artist drew Conan better then Barry Windsor-Smith.

Perhaps Frank Frazetta but his works were paintings and not comic book art.

A heavy artillery spaceship. I designed the spaceship and modeled in various 3D modeling apps (Groboto3D, Hexaton3D, Wings3D, Silo3D and textured in 3DCoat.
With processing in Adobe Photoshop 2017 and Corel Painter 2017 to give the image a comic book type of illustration.

Image is available as print, poster, framed wall image and various other products at my FineArtAmerica gallery

A steam powered airship flies over a distant, future city in dystopian world. I modeled the airship in Hexagon3D & Groboto. The buildings are the dystopian city blocks from Cornucopia3D. Scene was rendered in Vue Complete 2015 using the NPR settings. With details and adjustments made in Photoshop CC 2015 & ArtRage 4.5.

1936 Buick built to be a low rider.
The image was render in Vue Complete using the NPR (non photorealisitic render) settings. The car is a free model from 3DWarehouse and the buildings are the Dystopia buildings for Vue.

In this illustration I placed the Grobo Car in an environment influenced by the South Western USA like the desert of Arizona and the salt bed lakes of Utah.

I did this illustration more as a test of combining 3D elements into a 2D painting.
The sentinel and castle are 3D elements I rendered in DAZ3D Studio. Rest of the image I sketched and painted in Artrage 4.0.
I also used ArtRage to compose the 3D & 2D elements together into a single image…

“Mr Bug” is a 3D model I created using Groboto 3D ver 3.5. An untextured render of Mr Bug was brought into Artrage where I colorized the critter and than hand painted the background using ArtRage 4.0 and my trusty Wacom Intuos tablet…

I created this as a type of illustration that would be used in a children’s book…